A new government report was published by the Department of Housing on Friday (December 5) and revealed a total of 13,500 people accessed emergency accommodation nationwide in the last week of November 2023, an increase of 1,972 people on the year prior.
The Department's homelessness data is published every month and refers to the number of homeless people in emergency accommodation funded and overseen by housing authorities during a specific count week, usually the last week of each month.
The latest report covers the number of people who were accessing emergency accommodation during the week of November 20 to November 26 2023.
The report - which revealed 9,409 adults and 4,105 children are homeless - has since been labelled "shocking" by homelessness charities including Focus Ireland and the Simon Communities.
The vast majority of homeless people (6,790, or 72%) were found to be in Dublin, followed by 545 in Cork City and county, 361 in Limerick, 273 in Galway, 232 in Meath, and 180 in Louth.
Thirty-three people accessed emergency accommodation in Carlow in November 2023, marking a slight decrease on the year prior when thirty-five people accessed emergency accommodation in Carlow.
Roscommon was found to be the county with the fewest homeless people (14), followed by Leitrim and Longford with just 15 homeless people each.
One hundred and forty seven people were found to be homeless in Kildare, with 48 in Wicklow, 31 in Laois, 53 in Offaly, 68 in Westmeath, 69 in Clare, 29 in Monaghan/Cavan, 62 in Donegal, 67 in Sligo, 46 in Kilkenny, 40 in Tipperary, 64 in Wexford, 45 in Kerry, and 87 in Mayo.
Outside of Dublin, most homeless child dependents were located in the West and South-West areas of the country.
This includes counties Cork, Kerry, Galway, Mayo, and Roscommon.
The fewest number of children in emergency accommodation were found in the North-West, which includes counties Donegal, Leitrim and Sligo.
A Focus Ireland spokesperson stated: "New figures just issued report a shocking record total of 13,514 people homeless. This includes a record total of 4,105 children. The Govt must act now to maximise the number of long-term homeless households moving out of homelessness and into their own home.
"In the past two years more social housing has been delivered than for many years. If a fairer share of new social housing was allocated to those homeless for long periods we could reduce the harm caused by homelessness and ensure enough temporary accommodation for those who need it."
Executive Director of the Simon Communities of Ireland, Wayne Stanley, also commented on the news.
Latest Homelessness Figures released today show there are now 13,514 men, women and children in emergency homeless accommodation across Ireland. This is an increase of 1,972 people (17%) since last year.
— Simon Communities (@SimonCommunity) January 5, 2024
Read the full statement here: https://t.co/V1gDYlmpF9 pic.twitter.com/ZSMdGCriiu
In a statement published on Friday, he said, "This shocking level of homelessness documented in the figures released today must be placed into context. Each of the men, women, and 4,105 children that these figures represent are experiencing a preventable trauma.
"That level of suffering demands action. We know that the primary solution to homelessness is a home. Up to very recently, Governments have been heavily reliant on the private rental market to address social housing need.
"There are a multitude of reports that outline the difficulty of finding a home in the private rental market including our own Locked out of the Market report. This is no longer a viable answer to homelessness at the scale that we see today."
He continued: "Addressing the current homelessness crisis will require Government to work with local authorities to ensure more secure affordable homes are made available to those in homelessness and that we see increased delivery of social housing in the years ahead.
"There is also a need for a renewed commitment to keeping those at risk of homelessness in the home they have. Keeping to the commitment made in December 2022 to progress the Simon Homeless Prevention Bill and building the capacity of the ‘tenant in situ scheme’ where a local authority can purchase a home if the landlord is selling up are two actions that would help to prevent homelessness in 2024."
The report also noted 2,000 families are accessing emergency accommodation, over half of whom are single-parent families, marking an increase of 384 compared to the year prior.
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